There's absolutely value in solo training. In fact, much of my own development behind the rifle came from spending time alone—testing theories, refining techniques, learning my equipment, and making mistakes without distractions. But after years of military training, private contracting, teaching precision rifle, predator hunting, and running long-range courses, I can confidently say that training with a good partner accelerates learning dramatically. The key phrase is good partner. A bad training partner can slow your progress, but the right one becomes a true force multiplier, helping you identify mistakes faster, challenge your thinking, and improve at a pace that's difficult to achieve on your own. Let's look at five reasons why training with a partner beats training alone.
This is huge. Most shooters simply can't fully diagnose themselves in real time. A good training partner can immediately spot issues like recoil anticipation, poor body position, inconsistent breathing, a bad trigger press, or an improper natural point of aim—problems that are often invisible to the person behind the rifle. It's common for shooters to genuinely believe they're doing everything correctly until someone else watches them. That's one of the biggest reasons spotting is so valuable. It's not just about calling impacts or misses; it's about observing the shooter, identifying inefficiencies, and giving immediate feedback that drives faster improvement.
Learning alone often becomes a cycle of shoot, guess, adjust, and repeat. While that process can eventually produce results, it's often slow because you're relying on your own interpretation of what happened. A good training partner dramatically shortens that learning curve by confirming impacts, calling misses, identifying recurring trends, verifying wind calls, and catching equipment or shooter-related issues before they become habits. That immediate feedback creates a much tighter learning loop, especially at longer distances where small errors can be difficult to diagnose. Sometimes a single observation from an experienced partner can save hours of frustration and lead to a breakthrough that would have taken much longer to discover on your own.

This matters more than most people realize. Shooting alone is comfortable, but training with another capable shooter introduces pressure, accountability, and a level of performance stress that's difficult to replicate on your own. That's actually a good thing because it exposes weaknesses before they become a problem. Plenty of shooters look outstanding on a square range when they have unlimited time, no pressure, and no one watching, only to struggle under a timer, during a competition, on a hunt, or in a formal evaluation. A good training partner helps bridge that gap by creating a more realistic training environment, holding you accountable, and revealing the flaws that comfortable practice often hides.
This is where training together becomes especially valuable. A good partner helps you develop skills that are difficult to build on your own, including communication, spotting, making corrections, target acquisition, movement, and overall efficiency. In precision rifle shooting, becoming your own spotter is a critical skill, but learning to work effectively with another shooter is just as important. Whether you're competing, teaching, hunting, or operating in a military or practical environment, success often depends on clear communication and teamwork. Even during predator hunts, having a spotter, a caller, or simply another set of eyes can dramatically improve efficiency as well as success in the field.
One of my favorite parts of teaching is watching experience get passed from one shooter to another. Someone who has struggled through mistakes, solved equipment problems, learned to read the wind, and refined their shooting system can often transfer years of hard-earned knowledge in a remarkably short amount of time. Experience is one of the greatest teachers, and good training partners help compress that learning timeline by sharing lessons that would otherwise take years to discover. That's also why quality instruction is so valuable. Rather than spending years learning everything the hard way, you can build on the experience of someone who has already made the mistakes, solved the problems, and figured out what actually works.

Solo training absolutely matters. It builds discipline, confidence, and independence while giving you the time to learn your equipment and solve problems on your own. But training with a capable partner accelerates growth in ways many shooters underestimate. A good training partner catches mistakes before they become habits, speeds up corrections through immediate feedback, adds accountability, improves communication, and transfers hard-earned experience far more efficiently than trial and error alone. Perhaps most importantly, they expose weaknesses you didn't even know you had, helping you improve faster than you could by training entirely on your own.
Rob Orgel enlisted in the USMC in 2004 as an Infantry Rifleman (0311), serving with 3rd Bn 1st Marines in Iraq, including roles as a point man in OIF-3 & team leader in OIF-6. Later, he joined the 1st Marine Regiment, achieved the rank of Sergeant in 2010, & continued service in Afghanistan. Upon returning, he became a Combat Instructor at the School of Infantry West. Transitioning to private military contracting with Securing Our Country (SOC), he instructed at the American Embassy in Iraq. In 2018, Rob became Chief Instructor at GPS Defense Sniper School, revamping their program. Now, as owner & lead instructor at Emergency Response Tactical, he focuses on training novice to advanced shooters on the range over 300 days a year. Rob also hosts the Silencer Analytics channel on YouTube.